Ford Futurist Honored Among Fast Company’s 100 Most Creative Business People for 2013
- Sheryl Connelly, Ford’s global trends and futuring expert, is the only member of the automotive industry named to Fast Company’s Top 100 Most Creative People in Business for 2013, and the first woman from the auto industry to make the annual list
- Connelly explores trends up to 20 years in the future. She created Ford’s first annual consumer trend report – Looking Forward with Ford – which outlined 13 trends to watch for in 2013 and beyond
- Connelly collaborates with product development, design, sustainability and other Ford business groups, using consumer trends research to help craft viable business solutions for changing customer needs
DEARBORN, Mich., May 13, 2013 –
Every company needs a Sheryl Connelly. As global head of trends and
futuring for Ford, Connelly immerses herself in ever-evolving social,
cultural, environmental, technological and economic ideas to imagine
what consumers might want up to 20 years in the future.
Connelly’s creative prowess has earned her a spot on Fast Company’s 2013 Top 100 Most Creative People in Business
list, an annual look at the people and businesses that are redefining
creativity in industry, culture and commerce. Connelly’s award puts Ford
Motor Company in the creative ranks with Apple, Nike and Facebook; Ford
is the only automaker represented this year.
“Our
One Ford global employees are extremely bright and creative, and Sheryl
is one shining example of the talent that goes into building
world-class products our customers love,” said Hau Thai-Tang, vice
president of engineering, Ford global product development. “While it is
impossible to predict with certainty what will happen as far out as
2020, her thought-provoking insights into the future afford us the
opportunity to do scenario planning and create the best value solutions
for our customers.”
Connelly
considers herself the company contrarian. She provides a “functionally
agnostic” view of the world for engineers, designers, technologists and
others at Ford, while offering a different lens through which to view
future shifts in the marketplace.
“I’m
very proud to be part of this world-class Ford team and collaborate
with such smart, creative colleagues each day,” said Connelly. “This
award from Fast Company is a huge recognition for Ford as a whole.”
Connelly’s
work helps Ford take a big-picture approach to consumer research, going
beyond traditional business analysis to consider situations Ford can’t
control or influence. As a result, the company can better anticipate
consumer shifts and act on them in a way that gives Ford a competitive
advantage.
In
2004 for example, Connelly led a project that examined the possibility
of an economic collapse and the perils it would present to the U.S. auto
industry. A few years later consumers rallied behind Ford as the only
U.S. automaker that did not need government loans to avoid bankruptcy
when auto sales dried up during the Great Recession.
Connelly’s
trends research and her collaboration within Ford also helped the
company develop a business case to invest in compact utility vehicles
during the early 2000s – ahead of many in the industry. Ford predicted
consumer interest in smaller utility vehicles would be driven by
downsizing baby boomers as well as rising gasoline prices. From 2005 to
2012 sales of small utilities rose 155 percent. Today, nearly 7 million
compact utilities are sold every year, accounting for more than 16
percent of all vehicles sold worldwide.
“Nothing has been more prolific than the global rise of the compact utility,” said Erich Merkle, Ford’s U.S. sales analyst.
Connelly’s work also contributed to Ford’s pioneering introduction of its SYNC®
infotainment system in 2007. More than 5 million SYNC units have been
sold, with 14 million expected to be on the road by 2015 as SYNC
launches globally.
“It’s
thrilling that a more than 100-year-old company, in a very mature and
extremely complex industry, is on the cutting-edge of innovation and
creativity,” Connelly said of Ford. “It’s about being nimble enough to
anticipate or create change.”
Creativity and art
You
won’t find a crystal ball on Connelly’s desk, though. Crayons and
markers are the tools of her trade. Connelly encapsulates her thoughts
and futurist ideas through art. She is widely known within Ford for
forgoing typical text-based notes in favor of illustrations – drawing a
subject or idea, for example. She uses illustrations to convey her
ideas, begin discussions or take notes during a meeting.
“I’ve
always loved art. I would have gone to art school when I was younger,
had I convinced myself it was a financially viable route,” joked
Connelly.
Connelly,
who has spoken at several TEDX conferences in the United States, will
give an attendee talk at TEDGlobal 2013 next month in Scotland. It will
be her first appearance at the international version of the conference
series known for its focus on creativity. She will speak about consumer
trends and her collaborations within Ford to positively impact future
products for consumers globally. She also was asked to be an official note-taker
for the conference, using her creativity to capture the event’s key
messages and spirit and post them online for the world to share.
Click here to view Connelly’s most recently published illustrations from a 2013 TED conference in Long Beach, Calif.
A
Detroit native, Connelly is the first Ford employee to make the
prestigious Fast Company list. Fast Company’s 2013 Most Creative
Business People issue will be on newsstands May 21.
Courtesy of Corporate
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